Show ': - s :A - - - - - 1 ' ''''' - ' ' - 2 -- I - ' ' -- - 1 : ' 1 '- : ' :::' - - - ' '':- - ' ' i i i I 77- 'i 1 : i - p ( L'' 1 e 77 yt 1 have not been registered previously anil if you reached your twentieth birthday on or beforp December 31 1941 or if you have not reached your forty-fift- h birthday by February 16 1942 you sign up l service army The presir today for America's selective dent of the United States hp called upon every man ) 7-711 4' Not Previously Registered t I subject to the law to register today Utah's 38 draft boards have set up 244 registration places If you don't know the location of your registration place turn to page 18 in today's Tribune for thecornplete list Or'if ' you live in Salt Lake City and wish additional information dial If you - t t 17?egLi3st4er 1 For Service Today tl i i 1 1 :(7bt 1 Part Two Walker Tells Of Peak in Postal Load On Visit in I Tells of Booming Business f t s '" S L - " 4 l 4 : : - : 1 - sip peak Postmaster General Frank C Walker said Sunday morning when he arrived here from Los J with Angeles for a officials of the Salt Lake post effice i For the first time In history the i business of the department has exceeded the 3100000000 mark in A Fingle month Mr Walker re$100000000-plu- s The i ported month was December And inci- i' dentally that month's volume was t treater than an entire year's bus- i --t: irss bark in 1900 He estimated the total revenue for the current fiscal year would be approximately i 4 $900000000 t i — : ' - N - otle-uayl'iS- IL - 1 3 ' - i- I 1Var View!' ReNeals The postmaster general who has just completed a tour of the Pa- eine coast said the public in that wax taking a realistic view 1 area rf the war and recognized that I there are serionx days ahead Ile did not Agree with the current out- burst of chargex that the people taking the view Apathetic - s 'i : : k 4 ' ' I I : 1 ' 1 ! r '' - ::'-2 i : Tells of booming Postmaster General Frank C Illiker business for post office department since outbreak of war :e1tirn - rather that they are acquiring an i awareness of the gravity of the -I Certainly- he remarked "there :!s much less apathy than there was when I last visited the west last -- July" Mr Wallce expressed the view :that the early confusion in civilian fense preparations was being 4 iinated and that thet 1 calmly facing and preterple are for the possibility that they nay be subjected to some air tic wool clip - the impart of the war on operation of the postal aVs- Mr Walker said that the Irvork had been increased and corn- heated to a considerable degree mentioned alien registration An to 71Y-er- I : bonds And of the new tax as some new respon- the depart- - t The postmaster general was un- tn politiral questions ' r"pnrive that he had not been ilairiking much about that subject - re are for I ::ltoJ1: "Winning the war" he observed '!'"is the important thing now to all '!-- us'" I' ILeale for Denver I After spending the day here :Mr Walker left for Denver' where le will hold a regional conference postmasters during the early 'nart of the week I A Smoot lt Lake City postmaster left ' ist the same time to attend the - Dnver session Mr Walker's trip brought him familiar ground as he is eHe went to stientially a westerner with his parents at 1tthe age of two and after his gradtivation from Notre Dame university he returned to Butte to 1ln 1P0 law He became a mem' ri!practice her of the law firm of his brother As a youth he T J Walker worked as a hard rock miner ma- i chine wrapper and drill packer He Heft Montana in 1924 joining an luncle in management of a chain of in the New England I thestPrs I - c - ttates ' i Accompanying Mr Walker were M Donaldson deputy first as- J I: sIstant NV postmaster genera harles post Plaffenberger office inspector in charge of the i San Francisco division and H C i Yorgy manager of mil bazgage h n I express traffic for the Union railroad Ppific The postmaster general and his the Union party were greeted at Smoot i Facific station by Mr 1 :: 4 4' churches Beginning Wednesday and continuing through the y period masses will be celebrated each Wednesday at the Cathedral of the Madeleine 331 East South 40-da- street at 7 8 and 9 a m F Dowling assistant at s a Id the cathedral Further Lenten services at the Cathedral Temple Iles E of the Madeleine include stations at the cross each Friday at 7:30 p m and special sermons each Wednesday and Friday at 7:30 p m St Mark's cathedral 225 East First South street' will begin the Lenten period Wednesday with communion services at 730 and 10:30 a m St Mark's cathedral will join with St Paul's Episcopal church 265 Ninth East street Wednesday at 8 p m for first-da- y observance of the Lenten period F E Schumann The Rev pastor of St John's Evangelical Lutheran church :announced he Will hold Lenten services Wednesday at 8 p m in the church 1030 Fifth East street S L Chinese illZh school Dr Jotin T Wahlquist dean of at the University of will introduce the speaker Dr jrigarotifnthaelspOhiwnillnitaapeKaakppaat ro fratrrn:ty Tvesdny P t 7:30 p in in thf rniversity of Utah Union peace-lovin- tvild:ng i people Call South West Tem Cash for anything rahl Is 31 d -- h 1 War-Moderate- Salt Lakers can well remember the gaiety of the city's celebrated Plum alley Most of it (Adv) C w -- Suffers Cut Finger n9 of ' 653 Clifford Franklin South street East Twenty-firs- t suffered a eeverely lacerated left index finger Sunday while working at the Salt Lake small arms ammumtion plant Mark New Year Spirit Five years of self sa orifice-- imposed because their mother country was Under the heel of an aagressor nation—have dimmed their New Year's celebrption but Salt Lake City's Chinese observed the occasion Sunday in a moderate way Gone were the firecrackers the decorations and spirit which characterized previous celebrasmall groups tions Instead added only a little more to their daily menu and agreed that a final triumph will come home g to n holearyeyed nation of l i SCIWiCe S Special Ash Wednesday services will open Lent this week in Catholic Episcopal and Lutheran Discussing the role of schools wartime :Dr T D Martin D C director of Idlring for the National Edu- association will address teachers i SR It Lake City school Monday at 4:15 p m at South i en t With Educator Slates Address ill S L ther-in-la- L 'Churches S I D te as had been recommended by the wool growers at their recent convention in Salt Lake City it was learned Sunday iin Waahington F R Marshall secretary of the Nationr1 Wool Growers has been rcuesing this proposal with the war production board and other defense agencies and has rei ceived no encouragement in any quarter The post office department he reported in being organized and 4 oordinated to cope with wartime ' roblems and meet wartime emer- - Feb 15 was paid to Captain Mervyn S Pennion of Vernon Utah who lost his life in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor December 7 in memorial services Sunday night in the Washington L D S ward chapel Chief speaker at the services attended by intermountain senators and representatives army and navy officers we s J Reuben Clark of Captain BenJr fa nion and first counselor in the first presidency of the L D S church Captain Bennion 54 graduated from the U S naval academy in 1010 and ws on duty with units of the Pacific fleet at the time of He was a lifelong his death member of the L D S church and was first counselor in the Chevy Chase Maryland ward bishopric at the time he was assigned to foreign service with the navy several month ago In speaking of the Utah officer Mr Clark commented: "Much has been said about the high ideals that drove Captain Bennion forward He had a great ancestry— an ancestry that feared and- loved God and kept His commandments that gave him a character that accounts for all that has been said in his praise" Other speakers at the services were Ezra T Benson former rcise Idaho rerident and presidmt of the 'Washington L D S take J Willard Marriott former Ogden Utah resident and Riley A Gvvynn former Cowley Wyo resident and bishop of the Music for Chevy Chase ward the rites was by the Chevy Chase ward choir Captain Bennion's widow Mrs Louise Clark Bennion and brother Bennion of New Colonel Howard York City attended the rites The captain's parents Mr and Mrs Israel Bennion of Vernon were not present WASHINGTON D C :73 little prospert that the government will buy up the domes- WASHINGTON Feb 15—There Iit - r-f Speakers Pay Tributes at Bennion Rites Tribune Washington Bureau Ida pale of defense And collection automobile use the more important placed upon es At B uying IT'oo Outpltt i - Groul)s Leaders Rap Ii 3 S L Final drive to reach business Industrial and professiontil firms who have not yet contributed to the Salt Lake City activity fund of the chamber of commerc4 will be launched by 125 worker$ of the organization Monday morning Although most of the city's 1500 firms have been reached thiring the intensive campaign of the past two weeks a few remain whose managers have either been ill or out of town during the drive L K Nicholson chairman of the campaign reported Contributions totaling $31629 have been received from the business firms already contacted Mr Nicholson said Chairman Confident The chamber hopes to raise $40- 000 for its activities this year and Mr Nicholson expressed confidence Sunday that the necessary $8400 more would be contributed during the next week He added that final reports of the activity fund'a 125 volunteer Iworkers would be turned in to the committee within the next- 10 days The $40000 asked by'the chamber of commerce Mr Nicholson said is the minimum aniount on which the organization can carry out its 1942 schedule of activities While the chamber doesn't expect the volume of tourist trade the state has enjoyed in the past and realizes that curtailment of automobile travel will milke normal tourist advertising lunnecessary there will still be' a need Of the for "home advertising' states scenic attraction a to the thousands of workers Who have come into the Salt Lake Valley for employment on defense roducts now has given way to modern progress and there remains but a few of the "old timers" who knew China as a happy land There is herdly what could be termed a Chinese colony in Salt 'eke City But there are many faith are unshaken in the eventual outcome of the present war Because of that faith and loyCity alty Chinese in Salt Lake —and all over America — have skimped on their New Year's celebrations They will continue to skimp China will have the funds they can raise And one day Chinese again will say with joy the American enuivalent of "Nappy New Year": ''Kung Hee Fat Choy!' whose 0 0 Utahns Register 9 Draft day for Thir I Boards rif Churchmen Stress Unity And Tolerance :e:: :$: :: Renewal of the nation's pledges of tolerance and unity were asked by speakers Sunday night at a mass meeting in the First Methodist church Second South and : : '' ? 4:'''': '' f ' ' 4 :' : ' — 5t ':"' ' ':':': "''s '' ': '::' 4' 't': ' ': :'":1 : s''"::'4'3''': I 1 expi-nditur- Body of Inf'ant Found in Jordan River - 1 i - No Chien Found No clues to identity o the parents had been found Sunday by police Officers said a complete check of all births reported within the past weeks will be made in Louis Defter 30 of 1994 South an effort to find the parents street W1121 treated at the State an also Officers said InvestigaD S hospital for burns of the tion would be made of the neighface hands back and neck sufborhood near the river fered when an accumulation of fumes from a gas furnace exploded In his face Sunday about 8 p Democratic Leader's The burns were reported "not :''' serious" A mechanic for thetWestern Air Express Mr Deeter reported the explosion occurred when he struck a match to light a furnace in the company hf4ncrar at the Salt Lake airport The flame in the furrinee n previously had gone out and Purpose of the ineeti g will be enough gas to cause the explosion to lay plans for the forthcoming had accumulated No damage to the furnace or election campaign and to formulate a party policy for the county building was reported Salt Lake county's elected officials and Democratic paay county leaders will meet Mond' noon in the Newhouse hotel witli J Henry McCenn Demorretic cou ity chair- :' ::' 1 : ': ' ' ': :— i i ' ::' ' :: '''' ' ''!a ''' - - 4 ':! "?' f - '' i:' 'i' :' : '' 1 ' '" 01$°N1 kok'000i0r: : 3 :t or' ' Jk - - ' '''''' :' t: - 3' ' ::11Vakallif k ''' ' : "' ' : 1' ' :' ' '1 ''4:4000 i 'i 3 '' ': ' : s " '' c73: :i - ':t : :' :: - i 1 -- - I e i - ligq10it'!---77:ro::: ::- - 1 - 2:- : A-- 1-' : : : ''':i::::7''i: ' : :' : :f :' '':S ': ': s 4 "k ' f' 2:-- '2:- : - i i - 1r - ' I :!'s i ' t I ' (z:- 1 1 :!! - -:-: : i -- 0 1 ' e1- ::: :' - ' : : 'f ' :':'--'-- :' 1'-- ' : ' :: - 41 !'''-- ' — '' is 1 t ''':: - :fk - g ' :' '' ::- ! :: ' ' ! ' - 1 ' : ' : e et : i If - ':'1 ::' t' i :: mid-Marc- h atriolle- Tree Threatens o Outiffrolv Greenhouse - -- - green-trimme- d after-registratio- n Farm Program State Board 'Plans Tottr Meeting $A Feb-capit- ol - de-b- Yung A young deer that deserted the 83 fety of his mountairi range to venture ciciier to civilization whether by choice or other circumstances was blamed Sunday for an automobile accident in which a young Salt Jake couple suffered minor injuries J Darrell Nicodernus 19 of 653 Tenth avenue was the driver of the car which encountered the wandering animajSunday at 12:30 a m Mr Nicodemus toldl City police lie and a Companion Miss Jean Hilton 1$ of 1431 B1RinP avenue Nvere riding smith Wasatch boulevardnear Seventeenth East street when the on for Society ' i 72 registrars No 12 Mrs Harriet Walton Mrs 1 T Land-ra- ham Motorists Mrs D o n Crus and Mrs Waldemar W Neilson 40 registrars No 13 Hampton C Godbe and Mrs F C Heyward 50 registrars and No 14 Vard A Griffiths 100 registrars Registration rooms in the city and county building are respectively 301 302 305 308 404 and 408 TheMonday proceedings are but preliminary to a far more comprehensive and detailed examination to follow—a brief enrollment preceding the answering of scores of queries that will enable selective service boards to fully classy every registrant for the service to which he is best adapted The more detailed examination is embodied in a selective service deer suddenly ran in front of the car Attempting to miss the frightened "pedestrian" t h e driver turned the car sharply to One side of the boulevard applying the brakes sharply When the machine jerked Miss Hilton accidentally hit a switch on the dashboard turning off the lights Mr Nicodemus lost control of the machine nnd it overturned The driver suffered a bruised Miss Hilton knee and shook received head bruises and shock The deer probably is disgusted with modern transportation He was seen no more ' (continued on Page Eighteta) J i A a - 4 : - I a04oJom - - i : Furnace Explosion Deer Yearns Injures Worker Upsets Hold Meet Today ': ': e - : ' ' :t4 ' i: - ' In 244 places Registrars will be on state the 17::: throughout '::-:'::' i t '::!: ':: ' '' :::' hand at 7 a m to begin enroll'' '' ::J '':' :"4!' ::'i ''' OP1""?" ' ment of the young and middle-age- d ' :A ' '' ':: i' 0 men who were not included 7::"f i :i In previous registrations The ' 4 :: :I — :: ::-: draft boards will remain open conii 1 tinuously until 9 p m 4 Only Small Portion Utah's 30000we1igib1es are only :t::':'1''''-'4- '' a small portion of the 9000000 1V :":? i men in the United States who will 1!'::''!:4:-'':i-come under the new call for an 1 -- h' ::':i:::'4::::-'- '' army that tentatively has been set : : at 7000000 men Centers have :r t 1' zt i: been established in every com''i!::' :: '''''4:::!':-:v ')0't ii?' ' :: :' munity of the hation to handle :':'('' :: :3:7 the expected rush To simplify ' ' ' '':‘ t4A '': J: ''' ' ' : : procedure registrants will be :fr ': ' r'' ' C:''f 1 asked to answer only nine ques''''"i"' ': ':'":":-- ": '''''''''''''''"7'' :' s' (''' tions they include name resi:7::'$4! 1:?:! ' : ::: dence mailing address telephone t':4'''!:i:-'-'::::::1-1I ::'"')::':' age date and place of birth name I' :1::::i":--------c::1::of person who will always know ' '" the registrant's whereabouts emploYer's name and 'address and of employment place :::'"'-:In Washington D C Brigadier ::::e''$ General Lewis B Hershey nai : :: f' ':4 ! tional selective service director ' ' : V !:' i:::':: ' ::!i-':- ' said classification of the new men F:::'::F ' :' i: ''A11 ' :7 would take "some time but I : 7'::7 : Z: ' don't mean a year or six months" ''''' i' 4 ' ' ' ' ''s The lottery to establish the order ''':' I '' '' '' ''!: ' 'i of the liability for service will be i'' ' :::::::':::‘' t ' '' I ' i conducted about I t In the meantime Uneral Hersaid draft boards will conshey Miss Nonie Hammond pretty University of Utah sophomore tinue to call upon their eligible wields a pocket knife on the campus rubber tree which is reserves of manpower and Will doing more than its share to counteract the national rubber "resurvey" registrants who have been deferred New registrants shortage will be added to selective service rolls behind the men signed up A during the two previous calls Exemptions Listed Exempt from the new registrai tion are those now serving in the armed forces or those attached to an authorized military organizat tion Aliens including those desFor today's nomination of who is- doing the most for the ignated as enemies must register If anyone within the age classination's war effort the University of Utah has a prize candi- fication is too ill to report or is confined to a hospital special regdate—its one and only rubber tree istrars will visit him He must And the university staunehlV1' the board of his backs its candidate on the basis rnanent disfigurement of the however notify incapacity Those in penal instiof the trees fixed determination greenhoUse to counteract the nation's rubber This habit of growing is un- tutions will be registered when shortage singlehandedly (but per- usual for this particular rubber they are discharged Salt Lake City residents uncerhaps that's "stretching" thingsol tree workers in the greenhouse tain of any phase of the new call sevthe first it for maintain bit) spent for any rate the tree locate d eral years of its existence attain- are requested to call the campus greenhouse just ing a height of no more than that full information east of the Park building has been of an ordinary man's shoulders Registrants reporting at the city But recently for reasons known and county building will find free doing such a remarkable job of growing ever since the United only to itself (but obviously in a parking space on the four streets States entered the war that it spirit of patriotism) the tree has bounding the building and at the has been necessary more than once become far and away the largest Auerbach company field near by to have the topmost bra aches bit of botanical life inAhe Upon registration Monday regin order to prevent per- - house strants will be notified relative to five important ' 1 activities They are: report immediately to the local board any change of address 2 report immediately to the local board any change in work dependents or physical condition: 3 consult the advisory board for registrants of the counties Fifteen southern Utah Ingricultural Relationship when In doubt about your status industry to the war effort will be a chance to show what as a registrant and particularly gét discussed at a meeting of the have to offer defense indus- about your questionnaire 4 constate agricultural correlating corn- - they sult the government appeal agent at tries a meetings in Richfield In in the mittee Friday at 10 ruary 28 and March 1 reports thee if you believe you have been improperly classified 5 keep in One Of the specific subjects to state publicity and industrial touch with your local board commission be yelopment will discussed the problem Governor Herbert B Maw H J More Detailed Information created by the placing of mate- Plumhof and Ora Bundy members rials vital to farmers on prioriSalt Lake City's 448 registrars ties lists Talks at thi' meeting will of the commission aryl Frank E be made by Gus P Bsckman O'Brien director of publicity will Will work in three shifts 6:45 a executive director of the Utah spend ' two days in the Sevier to 11:30 a m 11:30 a rn to 4:30 p m and 4:30 p in to 9 p m council of defense: Stanley J county city Conferring with regstate director of ra- - rectors of the Associated Civic They willbe directed by chief and Ralph E Clubs of Southern Utah regarding istrars as follows: Board No 9 tioning boards William A Carter with 96 regis sites for defense plants Bristol 0 P At priorities director trars No 10 Mrs Joseph N Casella Mrs Theodore L Holman and 1tr Harold P Fabian 90 registrars: No 11 Mrs John B Burnr ' ! c4' representing the Catholic church Speaking on the necessity for a tolerant attitude the Catholic priest remarked that "it is not the intelligent and instructed Christian or Jew from whom we need anticipate the fruits of bigotry rather it is from those whose religious sense has been blunted and whose prejudices have been sharpened" "They are the ones" he commented "upon whom the sowers of discontent can work with singular effectiveness to destroy our national spiritual unity" ' Religious Sabotage He added that the "economic fifth columnist may sabotage our material resources but the religious fifth columnist sabotages the soul of America" Neither must be allowed a free hand if we are to win the war he remarked Mr Morris pointed out that differences of opinion are nowhere more pronounced than in the field of religion "No other subject do men take more seriously and in no other field are they more unrelenting in their viewpoints" he said "Yet men have learned to settle their differences of faith amicably and Mr Nicholson said without bloodshed" Emphasizing Expenditures Innate Divinity Emphasized in the chamber's There is an innate divinity in all 1942 budget will be men as well as a tendency toward in connection with the vvir effort wickedness and inside despite Mr Nicholson remarke(l that a outward all men are great deal of the needed $40000 the same appearances Mr Morris said how-- ( must be spent in preparing expen- ever he added when "bad men sive briefs maps and siirveys on must stand to- the good converge" the state's facilities for presentaor fall gether tion to government ancj private The "beautiful ideOlogies" of agencies who wish to erect plants modern thought were -- challenged and factories in 'Utah at Munich and trampled in Po- land Norway and Pearl Harbor" the L D S representative added Our modern ideology he asserted "must be realistic if we are to eliminate the present threat to the liberty of the world" The two speakers appeared at the meeting under auspices of Salt Lake Conference of Religious Groups which is sponsoring local observance of Brotherhood week The body of a newborn baby boy The seven-da- y period was desigafternoon was recovered Sunday nated by President Roosevelt as a from the Jordan river just north means of promoting unity among of the Fourth South streit bridge the nation's creeds and classes Wrapped in a brown paper sack Conducts Meet and a copy of an evenitig newsThe Sunday meeting was conpaper dated February 131the body found by W W Garrett a ducted by the Rev A W Lyons 'vs retired Salt Lake police detective vice president of the conference Mr Garrett whose residence at who- was introduced by the Rev 1118 West Fourth SouthIstreet is A E Butcher president The inbOunded on the west by the river vocation was offered by the Rev was retrieving a piece lot drift- J L Wilkinson president of the wood caught against an :anchored Salt Lake Ministerial association raft west of his home lwhen he Music for the session was by found the body the First Methodist church choir directed by Mrs M H Miller with Body Discovered Mrs Elizabeth Hayes Simpson as The retired officer said that as soloist and Mrs C Leander Frisk he moved the raft the brown as organist paper sack showed abovd the surRev Butcher the Rev E F face With a rake Mr Garrett Dowling and Rabbi Samuel H tore the paper loose anti seeing Gordon participated in a round the baby called police table discussion on the problem of Detectives Jack E Bla zard aria unity broadcast over radio station B O Hoagland said the infant KS! afternoon Sunday was into river the thrown possibly The president anfrom the Fourth South street nounced conference no special that Sunday 125 feet the raft southoll bridge im brotherhood observance planned They added that the qewspaper week the but the that during was the indicated thrown into baby of unity will be the basis the river Friday nightd but that theme church sermons throughout the condition of the bodyl indicated for city February 22 last day of the child had been dead more than the "Brotherhood week" four weeks ' ' '' Answering the nation's third call to regist6r with a view to possi' ble service with the armed forces ' ' 1 nearly 30000 Iltahns between the '''' '::'''''' ages of 20 and 44 inclusive will report Monday to their local draft :'''''' ':' boards to fill out questionnaires '''' i4 selective service ofby prepared ' ' - ' '' n'''0 ficials - ': ': ‘ I : :::1 ''': :5 ''' t''''''' : ' ' : ' ' :? :::::: t- t f::3! l'::::i:::i'4' ' ' :::''''''71 '' : ::::: ''''': :':: 1 0-- i?:-:- I Prepare Procedure' in Vast Program Maybe This'll Discourage It Second East streets The 'session which marked the opening of Salt Lake observance featured of Brotherhood week addresses by Nephi L Morris representing the L D S church and the Rev Robert J Dwyer : 1 I 1 - $ i ! Page' Eleven ::-- t - I i Workers Ho ipe To Attain $40000 Limit I ' I Saboteurs Gird for $8400 Goal Of Religion " The war has pushed the business Find the work of the U S post office department to an all time 1 4----- ---- 1 C-- C I Cabinet Member Notes Trend i ::-- t ( Z-Stibllit- Salt Lake City Utah Monday Morning February 16 1912 I : jftt-gaii- AS - :4 7 - : |